The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 22, 1914, Image 8

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    THE CENTRE REPORTER.
THURSDAY, JANUARY = 1914
BATTLES IN THE BLOOD.
Antitoxins Fight the Germs of Their
Particular Disease,
apimal has a certain dis-
produces large quantities
of the particular antitoxin that will
fight that disease. If the blood of this
animal be introduced into another ani-
mal the latter will get the disease, but
in a milder form, and will at the same
time be stimulated to secrete large
quantities of the antitoxin. It is now
capable of resisting an attack by an
army of powerful germs and becomes
“Immune” to the real disease,
If its blood be drawn and filtered to
free it from red and white corpuscles
the serum tlint is left is merely the
watery part of the blood heavily
charged with the antitoxins of that
disease. This, injected into the blood
of a person suffering from it, re-en-
forces the antitoxins already there and
speedily routs the enemy by neutraliz
ing the poisons that the toxic germs
are liberating.
Serum is prepared in two ways—one
by taking it from the blood of another
animal, the sther by a culture from
the blood of the patient himself.
There are only one or two diseases
that ean be cured by medicine. In all
others the medicine is given merely
to stimulate the natural production of
antitoxins. If we knew how to make
an antitoxin for every disease we
ghould have no more use for medicine.
The number of diseases for which
antitoxins are being discovered is mul-
tiplving year by year. — New York
World.
When any
ease its body
FRISKY SENATE PAGES.
They Are Great Mimics and Discuss
Burlesque Legislation.
They are the greatest mimies in the
world. They can take off the idiosyn-
crasies and humorous peculiarities of
the senators to a “1.”
Sometimes when the senate is not
sitting and too many visitors and page
are not around to observe the
proceedings the pages themselves go
into a solemn senatorial session. One
will impersonate the vice president,
another the chief clerk, and so on
Various other boys will pretend to be
either their favorite senators or the
senators of home states. Each boy oc.
cupies the seat to which the real sen
ator is entitied.
Bang! goes the vice president's gavel,
and the extraordinary session of pages
bas convened. There is always an
argument as to which senator shall
be recognized when the regular order
of business is reached. Every concelv-
able current subject is discussed, with
a goodly sprinkling of “baseball legis
lation,” which always carries with it a
rider by which each page senator shall
be entitled to an annual self renewing
pass for all the season's games.
A bill which is almost sure to be
introduced is one which proposes to
increase the salaries of the pages and
shorten their hours of duty.—Robert D
Heine in Leslie's Weekly.
“FEROCIOUS DOLPHINS.
Marine Monsters That Are Known as
Whale Killers,
There really is such a sea monster
as the whale killer. It is one of the
largest and most ferocious of all the
dolphin family. It also is known as
the grampus. It is characterized as a
genus by its large size and the conical
and depressed head, devoid of a beak.
The back fin is of great length, espe
cially in the males, and the flippers are
large and broadly ovate.
The teeth are comparatively few
in number, varying from ten to thir-
teen on each side of the jaw, and are
much larger than in any dolphins yet
noticed, being often an inch or more
in diameter and having an oval sec-
tion. The coloration is striking, the
upper parts and fins being black, while
the lower jaw, chest and under parts
are whitish.
The white area of the under parts
does not, however, extend to the flukes,
but ends posteriorly in a trident, of
which the lateral and shorter prongs
extend obliquely upward on the flanks.
There is a large white streak above
and behind the eye, and frequently at
lenst a purple crescentic area extends
across the back behind the fin. The
killer attains a length of at least twen
ty feet.—8St, Louls Times.
LOBSTER AND BUTTERFLY.
Widely Apart In Appearance, They Are
Close Relatives.
You would hardly think it to look at
them, yet the lobster is a relative of
the butterfly. The kinship is not mere
ly that of two members of the animal
kingdom. The lobster and the butter-
fly are actually in one and the same
great group of the kingdom, dike the
clam and the snail or the whale and
the giraffe, whose spheres of activity
are so widely separated,
It Is simply, as Darwin pointed out
in the case of all other creatures a
great many years ago, that the lobster
and its friends, the crab, the prawn
and the shrimp, chose one method of
life, while the butterfly and its set
chose another,
So the first group developed charac.
teristics sulted to the conditions in
which it lived, including as one of the
most important, as its members do
not move rapidly, a coat of armor to
protect them from thelr innumerable
enemies, while the butterflies and the
great host of other winged insects
shed every bit of superfluous weight,
trusting to swiftness to carry them out
of danger and to protective coloring
to conceal them when flight is un-
avalling.— London Family Herald.
Reporter $100 a year untiljFeb, lat,
bosses
"Late at the Play.”
We know from Pepys and from pas. |
sages in the plays of contemporary
dramatists that the manners of thea-
ter nudiences In the restoration epoch
were not nlee, but there Is no reason
to believe that even the fops habitual.
ly arrived at the theater late. Mr.
Sparkish, Mr. Novel and their fellows
would talk loudly while the play was
going on to show the superiority of
their wit to the poet's, but they likely
were on hand early to lose none of the
fun. In later epochs of English the
atrical history theater going was a se.
rious undertaking, not a mere pastime,
One can tell from the beginnings of
old plays that the authors counted on
audiences closely attentive from the
first. Lady Randolph is the first speak-
er in “Dougins.,” Orestes in “The Dis-
tressed Mother,” Almeira in “The
Mourning Bride.” The custom of “play-
ing the audience In” with a short plece
was of stil] luter origin. Perhaps about
that time the habit of going late to the
theater became common. “Half price”
for late comers was a custom of Thack-
eray’s time.— Westminster Gazette.
Cruikshank at Eighty.
“Among the many people whose ac-
quaintance | made in Richardson's
rooms was old George Cruikshank. 1
happened Incidentally to remark that
I wasn't very well, when Cruikshank
in his genial manner exclaimed: “What?
Not well? A powerful young fellow
like you ought to be ashamed of your-
self to talk of being unwell! Here,
let me see you do this’
“He sprang up, took the tongs and
poker from the fireplace, crossed them
on the floor like two swords and then,
whistling his own air, danced a high-
land sword dance with great agility
and accuracy, keeping it up for at least
a quarter of an hour. As he threw
himself into a chair, somewhat ex
hausted by his efforts, he sald, ‘Now,
then, when I'm dead you can say you
saw old Cruikshank when he was over
eighty years of age dance the sword
dance in Dr. Richardson's room." "—
From “Pages From an Adventurous
Life.”
Punished the Selfish One.
The Bale-Geneva express, says the
London Stundard Geneva correspond
ent. wus overcrowded the other dap
and several travelers had to stand In
the corridors of the second
coaches. One tourist saw a seat vacant.
but covered with
a passenger sitting
seat was “occupied.” “Yes,” replied
the stranger, “the man is in the restao
rant car, and will return soon.”
There the matter ended until the
express reached Lausanne, when the
owner of all the luggage prepared to
get out
“Pardon me.” sald the tourist,
luggage does not belong to yon,” and
called the guard. The latter sided with
the tourist, and the whole matter was
placed before the station master. The
selfish traveler had to prove, plece
by plece, that the luggage on the seat
belonged to him, and he finally was
obliged to pay for two second class
tickets
class
gage, and asked
near whether the
lugs
“that
The Charm She Wore.
Many are the charms adopted by so
clety women with a graln of supersti
tion in their makeup, and one of the
most unique is that worn by a young
matron who spends much of her time
at Atlantic City. Attention being called
to her curious pendant-—a polished sab
stance set in pearls and suspended
from a slender gold chalin—s
asked what manner of stone it might
be. “Stone?’ she laughed “it's just
plain, ordinary wood. You see, I have
a most unfortunate tendency to boast
and at such times caution tells me to
knock wood Oftentimes there Is no
wood at hand, so all 1 have to do to
save myself from my rashness is to
tap my little locket. Simple, ain't It?
~New York Tribune.
Beautiful India.
India bears the same relation to the
orfent that Italy does to Europe. It
is the home of palaces, temples and
monuments: it is the home of beautiful
art work in many materials. Most of
its cities have a splendid historical
past that Is seen in richly ornament
ed temples and shrines. in the tombs
of its illustrious dend and In palaces
that surpass In beauty of decoration
anything which Europe can boast -
“The Critic In the Orient”
she was
Betting Him Right,
They were enoying a motor ride and
had just entered a country road.
“May | kiss your hand?’ he asked, a
little confusediy
She removed her vell
“No.” she replied. “1 have my gloves
on.” —Lippincott'ssMagazine.
Teaching Him.
Briggs-Did your wife scold you
when you went home so late last night?
Griggs—You don’t know what it is to
have a wife who was once a school
teacher. Why, she made me write a
hundred times on a sinte, “| must be
home by 10 o'clock.” Exchange.
Soothing.
“Then you refuse to eat my first bis
cult?
“I don't refuse to eat it, my dear. |
don’t want to eat it. [| wish to have
your monogram engraved on it and
then hang It upon my watch chain.”
Louisville Courier-Journal,
Defining It,
Instructor (at night schooh—-Give a
sentence with the word “metaphysi-
clan” io it. Shaggy Hatred Pupil-On
his way home Mr. Jones metaphysh
etan.~Chicago Tribune.
Confidence (mparts a wonderful in.
spiration to its possessor. —John Milton.
AIA IS,
You don’t bave to have the gr)
realize that a frieze on the wal
in the head.
¥
Winged Creatures of Burnes,
Inn Be winged creatures ire en.
catintered vould least ex-
{ + of her
nnd
Wiese
where
Flsing 6
rings are found in all
there Is the fiyving fox, the
fruit eating bat, which the 3
“kruang.” They may be almost
any evening winging steady
fight often at a grent elevatio vell
out of range of a shotgn he fiving
synirrels as twill
Ore
pect them
known
ys call
evening Cones
1 hey
to the
scramble
Wide
the fore and
parachute fashion
itso seen
lofty tree
which they
started from
skin between
act in
sustain them in theh
of some size, but
The fiying Hzard Is seen in
the day in Jung
with a flagh In much the san
squirrel. Dut he }s
it requires a quick
tect him, The native
clay ball shot from th
North Borneo Herald.
ire
ole
up
they xX pansi
hind
1114}
ana
Ons
Ol
Hibs
the
ns the
er and
eir
Spiders That Hunt Fish,
There ure certain
two feet from
sondeis
and feed
woris
The earnive
phibious Ih
spiders
entirely
vions of South |
fer a fisl
to exitl
ng mice,
reser bh
iting
r
!
Quarreled.
auarreled
woman to
They
with
girl
asked me
other
fie
d him ten
beligre mel”
t “Well.
ve
red Lim to
Bob ¥
ad his
i the
ago.”
yon
shold have ref antes
fle 8
«tthe thing
id swear von tol
four years
very
«Detroit
Free "ross
Where Me Cot It
Teecher- Naw, Ww fe, where did you
get that chewing gum? 1 want the
truth Wilie-You don't want the
truth. teacher, and I'd rather not tell a
He. Toncher- How dare you say | don't
want the truth! Tell me at once where
you got that chewing gum. Willie-
Under your desk. ~ Exchange.
Hiustrative Dances.
“Dunces uted to originate frem tribal
customs”
“Well, doosn’t it seen possible that
some of these poplar dances tend to
Hingtrate the movements of persons
dodging a flock of motorears?'— Wash.
tngton Khe
——————— A
How to Treat a Wire Cut.
Never loft 0 wire cut on your stock
go unattended. Clean out the wound
with soap and water, wash with perox-
fde of hydrogen and apply a good heal
ing ointment. — Rural Farmer
Just a Buggyestion.
He-What! Another pow, dress!
That's enough to make me jump out
of my skin! She-~Why don't you to it?
Then | can have a belt and hand bag
made of it. Ulk.
A man's foture Is his own. He makes
it himself every day as be goes along
through life.
A ———— AI MA sn
Ge ting up in the world Is meroly »
pu. Ler of getting down Lo work,
SANCTUARY
atin
ited
IN ENGLAND.
The Principle Survives to a Lim-
Deg
Lon
fminal
nw
by | i t ping to
the npearest church or he ital and
claiming the ‘sanctu
for d Stuart
Great Brita Ti housands of
minal,
to
ary,”
davs
Just h 1
from cathedrals ar roval palaces
scores of towns
“4
time after
rod
betweed
Legend of the Rose.
A German tr tion gives the origin
of the moss rv 3 An ange
fo earth
sought a place
after his labors
was shut against the heavenls
At length t
sank upon the
came
amd ret
it every
g£ very wo .
i im a
It caught
falling
have
Wak-
ii over
1 tent
lenyes the
iid otherwise
drenched the messenger of love
ing. the angel said to the rose:
Thou hast ied the shelter that man
denied
A proof of my on 8)
And the green t
alot
While the de
Crowning the blushing
rosebush spr
ite oulsnren
which w=
apon
dow
11 with the
ous gathered al
ee abide
yut the
ne like a diadem,
flgwer.
wdropa sho
Naturally,
The teacher had been reading to the
class about the great forests of Amer
fen.
“And now, boys” announced,
“which one of you ean tell me the pine
that has the longest and the sharpest
needles?
Up went 5 hand in the front row.
“Well, Tommy?
“The porcupine.”
Jor.
she
Philadelphia Led
The Only Explanation,
“Remember,” said the fair visitor to
convict 2323, “that stone walls do not
a prison make nor iron bars a cage.”
“Well, den, inde,” replied 2323, “de
wanden's «oit'nly got me hypnotized.”
Now York Times.
Try It.
Ktart ouf with the intention of calling
everything by Ite right name and you
will change your mind before you have
gone a block - Chicago News
s——————————
Taking advice is someliines worse
than giving it
Thine
245000 La »
CHARLES D
FOR KENT
thiles west of ¢
H. TUMHAVE
lege, Pa.
hundred and fty acres, Twe
pire Hal; for particninre call W
ar C. Lb GOODLING, Stats
SHOATE FOR BALE
white shoats weigh
GEORGE B, BLACK,
oe well bred chester
about sixiy pout
Centre Hall, Pa 08
HIGH GRADS
Several cows, due
HOILSTEIXNE FOR
Or ORV HiAIeW wow
bails, oie #ix months old, the other t
od and registered, alwo belles coming two and
one hail years oid, ail in call, This stock is all
bed from yepinered balls and cows and hedferns
are bred to r gistered Luis R D. MUSSER,
Spring Mills. edp'd
ES TAN OF MULES, WAGONS,
NEBR FOR SALE
The undersigned offers al private sale the
lowing ©
Henvy span of mules, jonsand five years old
two horse wagon, track wagon, bob sled, all good
fas iow,
Hamosm-set of har om,
homes, used bul one year
ZETTLE BROTHERS,
Centre Hall, tha
SALE «=
Ks: two
nn weeks
ARD HAR
complete . for two
Mod
HENRY P. BITNER, A. m, Ph. .
SCRIVENER AND CONVEYANCER
Deeds, Mortgages, Bonde, Wills, Leases, Con
tracts, and other legal papers carefully prepared
nt short notice, One year jxjerience } in law ol
fice, Terms reasonable. Bell phone 17-8,
MURRAY'S DRUG STORE, URNTRE HALL PFA
dr18.1y
Hall's Hair Renewer ce
falling hair. No doubt about boty
You will surely be
Of he Receipts nnd Fxveditures of the
BOROUGH OF CENTRE HALL
For the year | nding January sth 1914
ERRSVALLRY BANKING { TREABURER
inpsid
$121 WO
unts and find
ow ledge and
he sl KITE BOY
3» Our 22
THOMAS L. MOORE,
HB. KREAMER,
J H. AKNARR,
Auditors,
Sale Register,
FERS A ARY ii
Mi
hwoest of |
me o'clock.
y Clayton
ws. OD
SOIR, ele. oni
ty of he Le bold goods,
¢ ducks,
pe varie includ.
MARCH ten o'clock, sn the
king Creek two ox west of
George A. Hentinger Four
elt, fourteen cows, thirteen youn
v hogs, two brood sows, also, & fu
implements,
MON DA ¥
A y On Ki
# by
ing
IDAY AND SATURDAY, MARCH 6th and
tth, on the Lee farm and at Centre Hall, by the
pxccutors of Dr. George 1. Lee: Farm stock,
implements, aud household goods
TUESDAY, MARCH 10
FRI
ose o'clock, two and
one-tialf miles cast of Fenus Oave along Brash
ey rood, by Osoar C. Homan, farm stock and
implements, Wise and Hubler, auctioneers,
THURSDAY, MAR( H 12, ten o'clock, onehall
mile west § Penbs Oavy i, Kumavnel ¥ungsrd
Four hoses, thirtesn oo vee, 8 bali i 4 heifegs, Jot
of bogs, IH shew p, jot Plymouth Rock chickens,
Peerless traction eowine, thresher and clover
huiler, champion hay press, Ross fodder shreds
der, woesd saw, belts, and fix ures, sverythine
complete, Also sil the arming implements and
tools, and sone household
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11,12 o'clock, two and
one-half miles west of Centre Hall, by Chas 8.
Barrds © Farm stock and implements,
MORDAY, MARCH 16, all day sale, Shed
mile south-east of Linden Hall by 8 KE,
Farm stock a d implements. I. 5 i, Shagen sue
tioneer.
TUESDAY MARCH 17, at OM Port. by William
Bradford. Large farm stock sod Implements. —
LF. Mayes, suct,
March 19, Henry Homan. Centre Hall:
stock, ete. ~L, F. Mages auch.
FRIDAY, MARCH 20, va o'clock, three miles
wml of Centre Hall, by W, KE Tate snd G. W,
Raiston : 7 borses, 11 sows, 9 young eal le
horn but, whout 90 hogs : also fail tine of farm.
thy implements, Haury Grove, auctioneer,
FRIDAY MARCH 27. all day. by George W,
Rawe, pesr Linden Hail arm stock and
Tne te,
MONDAY, MARUH 20 ton o'clock, one mile
east of Pott mv Mille, on the Wagner farm, by
Eimer A. Hamshoarcer! seven horves snd
Parm
HX cows, six young erties ot of Bogs, and 8
line of farming implements, all of them new